Guedes and co-author Gregory Laughlin think there are several reasons why Alpha Centauri B makes an excellent candidate for finding terrestrial planets. Perhaps the best reason is that Alpha Centauri is just so close, located a mere 4.3 light years away. But it's also positioned well in the sky, giving it a long period of observability from the Southern Hemisphere.
Most of the 228 extrasolar planets discovered to date have been with the Doppler technique. This is where a planet pulls its parent star back and forth with its gravity. The star's relative velocity in space changes the wavelength of light coming from it which astronomers can detect. Until now, only the largest planets, orbiting at extremely close distances from their parent stars have been discovered.
But with a nearby star like Alpha Centauri B, much smaller planets could be detected.
The researchers are proposing that astronomers dedicate a single 1.5-metre telescope to intensively monitor Alpha Centauri over a period of 5 years. In that time, any change in the star's light should be detectable by this telescope.
"If they exist, we can observe them," said Guedes.
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
A search for planets around Alpha Centauri
Interesting. [Link]
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